• Name: Hugh Laurie
  • Date of Birth: June 11, 1959
  • Place of Birth: Oxford, England
Mini-bio: British comedian Hugh Laurie could have easily taken another career track rather than that of well-known performer. As a secondary and college student, he was also a world-class oarsman. He wasn't the... read more only one in the family to have a passion for the sport, however. His father won a gold medal at the 1948 London Olympics as part of the British national team. The youngest of four children, Laurie went to Eton College, perhaps Britain's best-known preparatory school. During his time there, he became involved in rowing. He quickly became one of the nation's best, and in 1977, he became one half of the national junior champion coxed pair. In the world junior championships held in Finland that year, he and his teammate finished fourth in the world.The following year, Laurie entered Cambridge University, with the intention of studying archeology and anthropology. He was also intent on joining the prestigious rowing team, which he had little problem doing. He reportedly became ill during his first year, however, and was forced to withdraw from the rowing competitions. While regaining his health, Laurie had his first experiences as a performer by getting involved with "the Footlights Club," a famed undergraduate comedy revue group. In his last year at Cambridge, Laurie was elected president of the club, with fellow Footlighter Emma Thompson acting as vice president.Traditionally, at the end of the year, the Footlights take their act on the road throughout the nation. While on these tours, Laurie met, via Thompson, a young playwright named Stephen Fry. They collaborated on a sketch called "The Cellar Tapes," which they entered in the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1981. They were awarded "Pick of the Fringe," enabling the duo, along with the other Footlight performers (including Thompson) to go on tour throughout England and, eventually, Australia. Soon thereafter, Laurie, Fry, Thompson, Robbie Coltrane, and Ben Elton formed the television sketch program Alfresco, eventually leading Laurie to the famous (in Britain, at least) Black Adder series, headed by Rowan Atkinson, and also to the Jeeves & Wooster series with Fry. It wasn't long after these successes that he began appearing in films. In 1992, he appeared alongside fellow comedians Fry and Thompson, as well as Kenneth Branagh and Rita Rudner, in the ensemble comedy Peter's Friends. He subsequently did outstanding work as a character actor in such films as Sense and Sensibility (1995) and 101 Dalmatians (1996). In 1999, he took the lead in the adaptation of E.B. White's Stuart Little, playing the adopted father to a walking, talking, fully dressed mouse, a role he'd reprise in the film's 2002 sequel Stuart Little 2.After a two-year absence from the big screen, Laurie returned to the multiplexes in 2004 with a supporting role in Flight of the Phoenix, a remake of the 1965 James Stewart action-adventure film about a group of plane-crash survivors who attempt to build a new plane from the wreckage. That same year, Laurie essayed the titular role as the cynical but brilliant Dr. Gregory House in the prime-time Fox medical drama House, for which he won Golden Globe Awards for Best Actor in a TV Series Drama in 2006 and 2007.Laurie is also a musician of note, performing as a keyboardist with the rock band Poor White Trash. He added yet another profession to his lengthy list of accomplishments when, in 1996, he published his first novel, The Gun Seller. Married since 1989, he has three children with his wife, Jo. ~ Ryan Shriver, Rovi
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Hugh Laurie Wiki Profile

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House

"I admit I can't shake the idea that there is virtue in suffering, that there is a
sort of psychic economy, whereby if you embrace success, happiness and
comfort, these things have to be paid for
."
\ Hugh Laurie /

Hugh Laurie Mini Bio

Hugh was born June 11, 1959 in Oxford, England, the youngest of four children of Dr. W.G.R.M. and Patricia Laurie. He attended the Dragon School, a well-known prep school in Oxford, and went on to Eton College, perhaps England's best-known public school. Hugh's father had been an outstanding oarsman at Cambridge, Henley Royal Regatta, and in the Olympic Games, where he won a gold medal in 1948. At Eton, Hugh also became an oarsman. He rowed for the school, becoming junior national champion in coxed pairs (with J.S. Palmer) and finishing fourth in the Junior World Championships in 1977.


Hugh went up to Cambridge University in 1978 to read archaeology and anthropology, as well as to row. He rowed for his college (Selwyn) and also for the University in one of its premier sporting events, the annual Boat Race against Oxford University. In his first year at Cambridge, Hugh was rowing in the "A" trials crew for Boat Race selection, and was tipped to be picked for the six-seat, the "strong man" position. Unfortunately, he fell ill with glandular fever and had to quit rowing in early January 1979. He did make the crew for the 1980 Boat Race, as did his former Etonian crewmate J.S. Palmer. The race they rowed in was one of the most exciting in years, with Cambridge almost coming from behind (an unheard-of occurrence for any crew in this race) and eventually losing to Oxford by less than ten feet, the closest finish of the century. Hugh has mentioned in interviews that to this day he is still irritated by the loss.

Hugh also joined the Footlights Club at Cambridge, and got his start performing in their comedy revues and pantomimes. Footlights is a comedy club that has launched the show-business careers of such famous alumni as Alan Bennett, Peter Cook, John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle, John Lloyd, Griff Rhy Jones, and on and on. Also joining Footlights that year was Emma Thompson, with whom he had a brief romance. Hugh was president and Emma vice-president of the club in 1980/81, a year which saw one of the club's most successful revues, The Cellar Tapes, win the first Perrier "Pick of the Fringe" Award for comedy at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The revue co-starred and was co-written by new recruit Stephen Fry, whose 1980 Fringe play Latin! had so impressed Hugh that he asked Emma to introduce them with a hope of getting Stephen to write with him for the coming year's revues. They became good friends, and their writing partnership lasted more than ten years.

flixster.actor.pane.162746075 - flixster
Winning the Perrier Award led to a West End transfer for the revue, and then to a TV offer for Hugh, Emma and Stephen in two sketch series for Granada. Hugh and Stephen Fry went on to form a comedy double-act that became a fixture of British television through the mid-1990s in series such as Blackadder, A Bit of Fry & Laurie, and most notably, Jeeves and Wooster. Following this, Hugh branched out into films, in such diverse roles as Cruella DeVil's henchman in 101 Dalmatians, Baron Hector Hulot in the adaptation of Balzac's Cousin Bette, Mr. Little in Stuart Little and its sequel, a BBC staffer in Maybe Baby, and an oil company exec in Flight of the Phoenix.
Hugh has also starred in a West End play (Ben Elton's satire Gasping), done TV commercials as both actor and director, been one of the leading commercial voice artists in Britain, and recorded a number of audiobooks.


Hugh's first novel was published in 1996. The Gun Seller, an affectionate homage to the espionage novels of LeCarre and others, made the best-seller list in Britain and was well-received on both sides of the Atlantic.


In 2004, Hugh took on the career-changing role of Dr. Gregory House in a medical drama series for Fox-TV. The series House introduced Hugh to a new audience of appreciative fans. He was widely credited for much of the show's first-season success. He won an award for Best Actor - Drama from the Television Critics' Association, and was nominated for an Emmy in 2005. In January 2006, he took home the Golden Globe from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for his role.




Vital Stats
Hugh Laurie Information


Full name:
James Hugh Calum Laurie
Height:
6' 2½" (1.89 m)
Eyes:
Blue
Hair:
Brown
Star Sign:
Western - Gemini
Chinese - Pig
Nationality:
English
Heritage:
Scottish
Nicknames:
Hugh
Notable features:
Blue eyes
Education:
Dragon School, Oxford, England, UK
Eton College, Eton, England, UK
House captain at Eton, rowed for the school and for the England youth team in 1977 (4th at Junior Worlds)
Selwyn College, Cambridge University, England, UK
Third-Class Honours degree in anthropology and archaeology
Family:
Father: Dr. William George Ranald Mundell Laurie
"Ran Laurie" physician and 1948 Olympic Gold Medalist

Mother: Patricia Laurie
Brother:
Charles Alexander Lyon Mundell Laurie, 6 years older
Sisters: 2 older

Wife: Jo Green
Daughter: Rebecca Augusta Laurie, b. Sep 10, 1993
Sons: Charles Archibald Laurie, b. Nov 1988
William 'Bill' Albert Laurie, b. Jan 1991
Resides in:
London, England, UK
Los Angeles, CA, USA
Religious affiliation:
Atheist
although he was raised in the Scottish Presbyterian church
HL: "I don't believe in God, but I have this idea that if there were a God, or destiny of some kind looking down on us, that if he saw you taking anything for granted he'd take it away."
Political affiliation:

Interest/Hobbies:
Music, motorcycling, boxing
Charities/Causes:
Charities in which Hugh is involved:
  • Band From TV Global Charity Trust
  • Comic Relief
  • Guitar Center Music Foundation
  • National Alliance on Mental Illness
  • National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
  • Pediatric Epilepsy Project
  • Red Cross
  • Save the Children
  • The Art of Elysium
Causes supported:
  • Abuse
  • AIDS
  • Cancer
  • Children
  • Conservation
  • Conservative Arts
  • Disaster Relief
  • Mental Challenges
  • Education
  • Health
  • Homelessness
  • Human Rights
  • Poverty
  • Women

Other:







Hugh Laurie at LocateTV.com

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Hugh Laurie Trivia

  • Who's name is really James Hugh Calum Laurie ?  Answer »
  • I had a small role in Sense and Sensability and I had a mouse for an adopted son. Who am I?  Answer »
  • Hugh laurie has a fake american accent on both stuart little and house?  Answer »
  • I have been a father to a mouse and I play a doctor with a rather nasty bedside manner. Who am I?  Answer »

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